Yeah, I was noticing that, too. The first day I posted my Win32 version, there were 16 downloads of it. Total downloads so far for this X version are about 6, in a week.stlw wrote:So I see UNIX version of the debug frontend have much less users that Win32 version had
On the other hand, that was after WindowsNT had spent several months getting people to try his original Win32 version (and I had posted several mods) -- so everyone was much more familiar with it.
On the third hand, jal has promised to test it soon, and I'm a bit surprised that Combuster hasn't tested it yet (after bugging me about it on the other thread) -- and Brendan's testing has already been very helpful. And, of couse, quok has now offered some beta-testing time. So it looks like there is still some response left to go.
On the fourth hand, while the debugger part of my code is quite mature, the X-GUI part is in its earliest possible beta-testing stage -- and (unfortunately!) has turned out to be unstable in a way that I don't understand well at all. So, I can see why some people around here would hesitate.
And, on the fifth hand (look how many hands I've got! ), I posted a stubbed semi-functional standalone version of just the GUI frontend on the GTK forums website ( http://www.gtkforums.com/forum-16.html ) last night, for some GTK experts to scrutinize. There have already been 3 downloads there, and I hope for some additional feedback from them, very soon. So there is more response than just what you are seeing here.
It's very unfortunate that Alboin was unable to overcome his problems just with compiling bochs -- because he clearly was willing to put some effort into the beta-test.
But also, in some sense, I am very disappointed in GTK. All my code works perfectly on my system, but even with just Brendan and Stevo14 testing it, it is clear that the GTK libraries are not stable relative to Xlib and the available X-window managers. Unless it is possible to find workarounds to increase the stability, I am beginning to think that this X-window version may be useless, except in special cases.